An office suite might be nice. particularly for tablet users. . Here is a pretty good one I used on an old debian based distro called feather. It was dropped from debian repos after sarge. If something like this could be ported to the android api. http://siag.nu/

Yeah. I recently realized that some of my problems could be solved if only i was able to issue simple voice commands to my phone (nothing fancy, just take/reject incoming calls; maybe control the music player…).

Recently I discovered a missing app type: My son joined a soccer team, and they are using a specialized app (with a central server) to manage the trainings and games. The team uses mainly the calendar which allows for every player to accept or decline trainings/games and to define who is responsible for what (wash shirts, bring cake, …). Instead of the built-in chat, they are using whats-app for direct communication. I think the sports club is renting this service from the company that also provides the app, and I am very uncomfortable that my families data is given to this service for many reasons, among them the reason that the app does not appear very reliable and more like a quick and dirty and vulnerable hack. Luckily, my wife is less concerned about FLOSS and installed the app and already uses whats-app, but I really dislike that my son couldn’t play in this team without me (or my wife) accepting the use of closed and intransparent services without open interfaces. I am sure that it would not be too difficult to come up with such a service plus app, but I think the biggest issue is that, despite being a huge sports club, they would still chose the paid service over the floss alternative if they had to care for the infrastructure themselves (hosting, etc.). And the market share of whats-app is really a pain. They should be forced to provide open interfaces (and this holds for other messengers such as signal as well), since the customer has no choice (as he has with other services such as POTS). Sorry that this became a rant, but what I wanted to contribute here: sports team management is missing.